Everything you need to know about the 2024 NWSL season

👀 What’s new
The NWSL is in their makeover era. Beyond arming each team with splashy new kits, the league is evolving to stay competitive with Europe’s pro women’s leagues, like England’s Women’s Super League (WSL), Spain’s Liga F, and France’s Division 1 Féminine.
Here’s what changed since the 2023 season wrapped up:
🏆 The Challenge Cup is no longer a season-long tourney, but just tonight’s one match between last season’s champion (Gotham) and NWSL Shield winner (Wave). Alrighty then.
📈 Two expansion teams — Bay FC and the Utah Royals FC — will debut this weekend, with two more on the way by 2026: a long-awaited Boston squad and another still-undecided team.
🧼 Meanwhile, two original NWSL teams — the Portland Thorns and the Chicago Red Stars — are under new ownership, removing the last high-profile decision-makers who had a hand in the league’s former widespread systemic abuse.
🏟️ The Kansas City Current’s CPKC Stadium, one of the only women’s soccer–specific facilities in the world, hosts its first game tomorrow when the Current face the Thorns at 1 p.m. ET. New levels of joy, unlocked.
🌎 With international roster spots increased from five to seven on each team this year, there’s a massive influx of global talent in the league.
🦇 And while some teams looked overseas for new talent, Gotham became a supercharged superteam, signing four players from the current USWNT to their championship squad.
📺 And then there’s the new $240M media deal, the largest ever signed in women’s sports. Games will air on a combination of platforms in the U.S., including CBS, Paramount+, ABC, ESPN, Prime Video, NWSL+ (the league’s free streaming network), and ION. The NWSL wasn’t kidding when they said, “Keep up.”